BROOKLYN, NY (January 8, 2013) – Slow Food USA announced today that Richard
McCarthy will join the organization as Executive Director. McCarthy has been a Slow
Food USA member since 2001 and brings 17 years of executive leadership experience in
the non-profit sector. He will begin on January 22, 2013.

“Richard’s deep understanding of both food producers and consumers and his proven
success in creating more joy and justice in communities around the US and the world is a
perfect fit for Slow Food,” said Katherine Deumling, Board Chair of Slow Food USA. “I
am thrilled that he’s joining our team and excited to see where his creativity and passion
take Slow Food USA in this next chapter.”

“I am humbled to have the opportunity to lead the organization that has inspired me for
so many years to grow community through purposeful food programs,” said Richard
McCarthy. “In that sweet spot of tradition meeting innovation, Slow Food USA provides
us all with the promise of a future where producers and consumers join hands for good,
clean and fair food for all.”

McCarthy is currently the Executive Director of Market Umbrella
(www.marketumbrella.org), an internationally recognized non-profit mentor organization
for markets, community building and sustainable economic development. Since he
founded the organization in 1995, it has steadily grown and now serves 1,250 markets
around the world. At the core of Market Umbrella is the Crescent City Farmers Market he
co-founded in New Orleans. Under his leadership, it became one of the first farmers
markets in the Deep South to accept public assistance benefit cards, resulting in a 400%
increase in the use of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (formerly known as
food stamps) at the market.

“I am most delighted Richard will serve Slow Food USA as executive director,” said
Carlo Petrini, founder and president of Slow Food International. “He possesses a deep
commitment to protecting our universal right to food and pleasure and is a proven
advocate for the people who grow and prepare our food. The United States has a
tremendous role – and responsibility – to play in leading the fight for good, clean and fair
food, and we must continue to build momentum to realize the world we believe in.”

]]>http://slowfoodla.com/2013/01/news-from-the-home-office-slow-food-usa-appoints-richard-mccarthy-as-executive-director/feed/0Slow Food Volunteer Opp: Glean Team at Food Forwardhttp://slowfoodla.com/2012/12/slow-food-volunteer-opp-glean-team-at-food-forward/
http://slowfoodla.com/2012/12/slow-food-volunteer-opp-glean-team-at-food-forward/#commentsWed, 19 Dec 2012 13:41:04 +0000http://slowfoodla.com/?p=2741Food Forward’s Mary Baldwin is seeking vols for their new Farmers Market Recovery Program. This is so very Slow Food and is a phenomenal way to directly participate in advancing good food access in L.A. See her post below:

Santa Monica’s glean team

The Farmers Market Recovery Program is an initiative by Food Forward to administer a volunteer-­-based, reliable, systematized collection of produce from farmers at the end of markets that would otherwise go to waste, 100% of which will then be donated to agencies serving those in need. We are currently at the Santa Monica Wednesday Market, Studio City Sunday Market and Hollywood Sunday Market.

Since initiated 4 months ago in August 2012, we have already collected over 51,000 pounds of food!

How we do it

It isn’t rocket science. We arrive at the market and issue collection boxes to the farmers. The farmers fill the boxes with their excess produce. At the end of the market, we collect the boxes and distribute them to our receiving agencies.

Of course, for things to go so smoothly there’s quite a bit of preparation involved, but by the time we’re at the market we’ve received the support of the Market Manager, vetted receiving agencies that serve meals to local people in need, developed relationships with farmers, and built handtrucks from itty bitty little pieces.

What’s next?

We are looking for reliable Gleaners to join in our efforts to relieve hunger in the LA area! This is a great opportunity for students in need of community service hours or internship credit, recent college grads trying to get involved in the Los Angeles food community, or folks already involved in their community but looking for a deeper experience at the Market.

]]>http://slowfoodla.com/2012/12/young-folks-urban-farmers-dinner-12-17-12-at-good-girl-dinette/feed/0Guest Post: Terre Madre Delegate Rick Nahmiashttp://slowfoodla.com/2012/12/guest-post-terre-madre-delegate-rick-nahmias/
http://slowfoodla.com/2012/12/guest-post-terre-madre-delegate-rick-nahmias/#commentsWed, 12 Dec 2012 13:27:21 +0000http://slowfoodla.com/?p=2721Slow Food Los Angeles is highlighting the Terra Madre experiences, ideas and perspectives from our L.A.-based delegates in the coming weeks. This week’s post is by Food Forward Founder and talented photographer Rick Nahmias. Rick’s passion for food parity and gleaning for good has grown Food Forward from a local garage charity into a multi-county volunteer organization that has picked and donated over one million pounds of fruit. And that’s just in two years. Below is a set of selections from a much larger post that he wrote, which you can find on Food Forward’s blog.

Last May, I received word I had been selected to be a US delegate for Terra Madre and the Salon del Gusto, a.k.a. The Slow Food Conference, which just wrapped up in Torino, Italy a couple of weeks ago. These two events – held for the first time together under one roof – are a massive international food justice/food policy conference and the largest international food and wine exposition in the world. For those not familiar with Slow Food, one of its best and often repeated mantras at Torino which also helps describe their ethos was: buy food without a bar code. Slow Food’s grown to an international movement, with hundreds of chapters found on every continent, all trying to push back at the McDonalds-Monsanto-Walmart-ification of our world’s food system through grassroots engagement.

Slow Food participant from Calabria

Though I came back with plenty to mull over from the experience, the biggest ah-ha moment was simple: the realization that with out a doubt, food today is having its “moment.” I don’t mean the seemingly endless waves of “celebrity” chefs, or the billions being made satisfying the palettes of “foodies” (a patronizing term that should go away for good.) But F-O-O-D, including a deeper more visceral understanding of it and its vast impact on our lives through abundance and scarcity, has in the last few years arguably made it one of the most unifying and urgent topics being assessed on the planet no matter what culture you come from. Food is now getting a deeper understanding, appreciation, ritualization, and most importantly, coming together around its universal power, than it ever has in history.

It’s a time of change, sharing, reassessment, learning, preservation and new thought – all around this wonderfully democratizing activity we as humans all must do to survive. Simply put, it’s an incredibly exciting and important time to be involved working with food, and with questions coming from any direction about how we eat – as individuals, a community, a country, as a world. With an advertised 250,000 attendees this year, Terra Madre/Salone del Gusto became the launch pad for a million conversations around all these topics.

I am happy to report that Slow Food, an organization that just a few years ago, myself and many others had serious doubts about being more dedicated to elite palettes and well-stuffed pocketbooks, has matured into a vital and inspiring movement where many voices can be heard, including an impressive number of indigenous communities which are now at the table.

Carlo Petrini, the group’s charismatic founder, is at age 63 still the movement’s rock star (followed everywhere he went by a phalanx of paparazzi.) I had the good fortune of hearing him speak twice during the 5 day event, and he is deeply inspirational. As passionate as ever, he seems genuinely thrilled at the prospect of growing world food movement he helped father, as well as the place youth, biodiversity and human diversity have to play in its future. He is committed to the idea that four marginalized groups will lead the way to solving the world’s current food crises: women, the elderly, farmers and indigenous people. And as someone who has spent much of the last decade documenting many in these categories, I couldn’t agree more.

Slow Food Delegate from Ecuador

…

I was honored to speak on the opening US delegate panel about documentary work around food and shared how The Migrant Project came about and ultimately inspired Food Forward. I was flanked by colleagues speaking about how they are preserving the stories of everything from seeds and historic early-American gardeners, to contemporary individuals dedicated to changing our food systems. Quite impressive.

Though there was frustratingly minimal conversation on the topic of food waste – with only one dedicated panel – there was a strong undercurrent overall honoring food and its place in our lives in its myriad forms, including a great only-in-Italy proverb take away: “When crumbs fall off the table, sweep them into your hands and kiss them.”

…

The take away, beyond jars of pistachio creme, honeyed grappa and citron-infused chocolate, was a feeling the world can come together – and must come together – to address the topics of food in our lives – both those of crisis and celebration. It allows us to not just share the countless solutions and inspiration that can be drawn from from every corner of the globe, but to an incredible way to learn about ourselves as human beings.

Me with Chef Ernest Miller of Master Food Preserver program at Terra Madre

Slow Food Los Angeles will be highlighting the Terra Madre experiences, ideas and perspectives from our L.A.-based delegates in the coming weeks. First up, Farmer’s Kitchen Executive Chef and Master Food Preserver Ernest Miller. Anyone who has met Ernest will not fail to notice his energetic advocacy and passion for local food, farmers market produce and, of course, safe home food preservation. He is the lead instructor of the Master Food Preserver program for the University of California Cooperative Extension in L.A. County and speaks regularly both here and across the country on food access and safety issues.

I’ve been back nearly a week from Terra Madre/Salone del Gusto and I’m still digesting, figuratively, everything I saw, heard and, of course, tasted.

This was the first year that Terra Madre and Salone del Gusto were held simultaneously; it was all but overwhelming. From workshop and lecture to food fair and back again, it was a dizzying combination of intellectual
stimulation and gustatory exaltation.

There is so much to report, but I first want to talk about the Salone del Gusto – the world’s largest food and wine fair. Initially, it might appear that the Salone is not much more than another fancy food and wine show, such as those held in New York or San Francisco. Upon closer inspection, however, there are tremendous and significant distinctions.

The most important of these is that practically every booth is dedicated to a very specific region in Italy or the world; sometimes a single village or valley. Consequently, the food displayed and available for tasting is from that region. But it goes beyond that. Not only is the food regional, but it is part of that region’s history and culture. The vast majority of booths featured “Presidia” foods, that is, the foods were unique, traditional and endangered:

The Presidia program is coordinated by the Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity, which organizes and funds projects that defend our world’s heritage of agricultural biodiversity and gastronomic traditions.

Loosely translated into “garrison,” Slow Food Presidia (Presidium, singular) are local projects that work to improve the infrastructure of artisan food production. The goals of the Presidia are to guarantee a viable future for traditional foods by stabilizing production techniques, establishing stringent production standards, and promoting local consumption.

The varieties of cheeses and sausages were unbelievable. I tasted some of the finest in the world. But what really impressed me were the legumes. Seriously. I never tasted so many varieties of beans.

That may not sound very exciting but, for me, it was. Beans have been the staple food for many human communities. They are rich in protein, minerals and frequently improve the fertility of the soil in which their grown.

In the Salone, each Presidia bean was unique in color, shape, taste. Each bean had a story to tell about its history, its environment, its people and even how it was cooked.

For example, the Sorana bean from Tuscany is traditionally cooked in a wine bottle. Hunters would take flask-shaped bottles of Chianti with them when hunting. After drinking the wine, the hunters would then fill the bottles with water, Sorana beans, garlic, salt and sage. The bottles would be placed in the ashes of a dying fire and in the morning, the beans would have been slow cooked to perfection: “Fagioli al Fiasco”.

Today, they actually sell glass flasks specifically for cooking the beans. But, they are still cooked slow with garlic and sage. And, through the Presidio, a unique, heirloom legume is preserved.

Thomas Keller’s restaurant, The French Laundry, just posted an Instagram photo of what initially appeared to be pretty, light orange lanterns, acorn-shaped and hung at different heights from a simple piece of twine. Then we remembered what time of year this is.

Those lanterns are actually freshly peeled Hachiya persimmons, hung to dry so that they may become Hoshigaki — persimmons that are dried whole over several weeks through a combination of hanging and delicate hand-massaging, until the sugars form a dusting that looks like frost.

It’s a compact, verdant thing. Pruned over the years into a tidy, almost topiary like ball in part due to its location at the end of our deck. We live on a tall hillside overlooking the Arroyo and Highland Park and the lemon tree, planted by well-meaning previous owners, is smack dab in the middle of one of the most beautiful views in Northeast Los Angeles. I’m loathe to remove it – it produces giant and aromatic Eurekas like it’s trying to win an award – but we also love the view.

We have opted to prune, tightly and without mercy. And then prune some more. And again. Despite this near militaristically maintained haircut, it still it dumps pounds of lemons into my lap year round. And we maintain our view.

This year’s prunings have lacked regularity and purpose. It has been a busy year – a short summary is available on my personal blog, Urban Schmurban, if you’re curious. My assumption was that the lemon tree would rejoice, finally free to spread and extend itself while forcing me to visit neighbors with bags of lemons in hand and helpful lemony recipes at the ready. “At last,” it would sigh to me. “Now I can truly reach my potential!”

The truth was mockingly opposite. Instead of putting energy into fruit, the tree has sent out leggy and anemic looking branches, all flowerless and in some cases a less healthy looking green. My pounds of lemons dwindled into a few insipid fruits. Lesson learned – good health and harvests require my sincere attention and seemingly cruel, but very beneficial sculpting and pruning.

And so the metaphor revealed itself.

The Los Angeles Chapter of Slow Food is undergoing a similar transformation under the careful attention of Lisa Lucas Talbot and myself. Since its founding, we watched the membership grow and thrive and we’ve produced and supported community building events and initiatives. Under the charter leadership of Evan Kleiman and then followed by the co-leadership of Lisa, Judi Bikel and others, Slow Food LA has fostered thoughtful discussion and potent action to grow and preserve the slow food movement in our communities. As a Master Food Preserver and the farmers market columnist for the LA Weekly, I was asked to participate in Slow Food sponsored panel discussions about local farmers markets, fair food access and food waste. And it was following that involvement that Lisa approached me and asked if I would help her form the new leadership team for the next chapter in Slow Food LA’s book.

This metaphorical pruning is a thoughtful and purposeful process and doesn’t equate to losing the best of our history and knowledge. Lisa will still have an active role in Slow Food’s regional leadership as its Governor and still provides insightful perspectives on how Slow Food LA can play an active and more involved role throughout Los Angeles. Together we’ll sculpt the foundation that will allow Slow Food LA to bloom and build community. I am sincerely honored to be a part of this process and appreciate the support I’ve received from everyone in the Slow Food community.

“As the gardener, by severe pruning, forces the sap of the tree into one or two vigorous limbs, so should you stop off your miscellaneous activity and concentrate your force on one or a few points.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

Long overdue? We are Slow Food, after all. Blogs are important, yes. They provide detailed information, insight and a more comprehensive way of getting the word out. The question we’re asking has become, “how do people get here?”

More and more we aggregate our information via social media portals. In some cases, almost exclusively. Not having a Twitter account (which we do have BTW) or a Facebook page can be a liability. So now we have a Facebook page. Go like us, assuming you do.

The Slow Food Los Angeles Facebook page will be how we communicate food news both large and small that is relevant to our mission. Engage with your fellow members. Discuss important issues. Mobilize. Learn. Enjoy. And occasionally, eat.

Last year’s Good Food Festival — the first of its kind in L.A. — is back in 2012 with a thought provoking call to action. At we approach this year’s elections, Californians are once again in a position to shape the future of our food. This coming Saturday at LACMA, the Good Food Festival & Conference will be highlighting those election issues — namely Proposition 37 — plus a host of other topics including fair food access, jobs in food, and building community – a topic near and dear to Slow Food’s heart.

Since the Saturday event is being hosted at LACMA, it’s natural to dovetail with some food art. Tours of art and food in LACMA’s collection include: 10:30–11:30 am, “Trade and the Changing Palette of the Dutch” and “The European Table Transformed” and at 1:30 and 3:30 pm, “Dining Out in Nineteenth-Century France” and “The Age of Elegance.” Tours are limited to thirty participants and space is available on a first-come, first-served basis. Tours meet on the Los Angeles Times Central Court.

And the important part — Slow Food LA members get a discount. Go to the Good Food Festival ticket website and click on tickets in the upper right hand corner. Select your tickets and then enter the promotional code “slowfoodla” just above the order button.

The Good Food Festival & Conference is produced by FamilyFarmed.org, in cooperation with the Santa Monica Farmers Market and with support from the City of Santa Monica and the City of Pasadena.

]]>http://slowfoodla.com/2012/10/good-food-festival-conference/feed/0On The Point: GMOs, Food Waste, and Food as Entertainmenthttp://slowfoodla.com/2012/10/on-the-point-gmos-food-waste-and-food-as-entertainment/
http://slowfoodla.com/2012/10/on-the-point-gmos-food-waste-and-food-as-entertainment/#commentsTue, 09 Oct 2012 16:20:11 +0000http://slowfoodla.com/?p=2664Lisa Lucas Talbot, Slow Food USA’s regional governor for southern California (and outgoing coleader of Slow Food Los Angeles), appeared on The Point with Robert Kenner (director of Food, Inc. and founder of fixfood.org) and Martha Rose Shulman (creator of the New York Times’s “Recipes for Health” column) to discuss GMOs and the upcoming vote on Prop 37 in California, the high cost of food waste, and the influence of food t.v. on our eating habits. Watch the episode below:

]]>http://slowfoodla.com/2012/08/augusts-back-to-school-garden-plugmob/feed/0Fix Food and Robert Kenner revisit Carole Morison (and her chickens)http://slowfoodla.com/2012/08/fix-food-and-robert-kenner-revisit-carole-morison-and-her-chickens/
http://slowfoodla.com/2012/08/fix-food-and-robert-kenner-revisit-carole-morison-and-her-chickens/#commentsWed, 08 Aug 2012 17:58:23 +0000http://slowfoodla.com/?p=2652Carole Morison, the chicken farmer who was featured in Food, Inc. and who discussed her concerns about the intensive methods of industrial chicken farming, shares her new approach with Robert Kenner in the latest video from Fix Food:

When: Saturday, August 25, 2012 beginning at 5:00pm.Where: Location to be announced at 3:00pm on the afternoon of the event.Cost: “Bring Your Own” admission: $28 per person; “Catered Dinner” admission: $78 per person. Ticket price includes permits for space, alcohol permits for our guests to be able to bring wine and champagne, table & chairs, security, bathrooms, medic station, waste management, musicians, and event set up and clean up. A portion of the proceeds will also benefit Slow Food Los Angeles.

What is it?
The PopUp Dinner L.A. is an elegant “pop-up” dinner picnic that will be held in an outdoor location that will remain a secret until the afternoon of the event. Similar dinners have been held in Chicago, Atlanta, San Diego and San Francisco where thousands of people have gathered to celebrate the simple things that connect us all; wonderful food, great wine, and dining with the people we love.

Guests of PopUp L.A. are required to wear all white and bring their own tableware, food, and beverages that reflect a love for dining in an elegant and graceful style. PopUp L.A. will provide tables and chairs.

Event Schedule
On the day of the event, guests will receive an email at 3:00pm with the location information. The evening will progress as follows:

Attire
The event organizers encourage all attendees to dress in white, elegant fashion from any era. Accessories and shoes need not be white.

Equipment
PopUp L.A. will provide tables and chairs. Attendees Guests should provide their white tablecloths and table decor. The tables will be 8′ long x 30″ and will be set up in continuous rows. Guests should bring silverware, plates, serving ware, glasses, and whatever other tables accessories they wish. There is “ambient” lighting at the venue, but guests are responsible for lighting their own tables. There is no electricity at the site so bring candles or battery operated lights/candles.

Seating
So that large parties can buy their tickets separately but ensure they sit together, seating is first-come, first-seated.

Dinner
Feel free to bring appetizers, an entree, desserts…the menu is up to you. Wine, champagne, and beer may be enjoyed, but the event organizers request that wine and champagne are limited to one bottle per person.

Leave No Trace
All parties must bring their own white trash bags and plan to take their trash and recyclables with them at the end of the evening, and dispose of any waste they generate at home (not at the garbage cans on site).

Conduct Code
The event organizers want the event to be fun and welcoming for everyone who attends, and they ask for polite behavior and genteel manners to dominate this very special evening from beginning to end. This event will include a large amount of people and its smooth operation is dependent upon everyone’s cooperation.

]]>http://slowfoodla.com/2012/08/popup-dinner-evening-in-white/feed/0Author Event: Joseph Shuldiner and Pure Vegan at Lindy & Grundy’shttp://slowfoodla.com/2012/08/author-event-joseph-shuldiner-and-pure-vegan-at-lindy-grundys/
http://slowfoodla.com/2012/08/author-event-joseph-shuldiner-and-pure-vegan-at-lindy-grundys/#commentsSat, 04 Aug 2012 23:39:11 +0000http://slowfoodla.com/?p=2643Joseph Shuldiner, an L.A. County Master Food Preserver, the founder of the Altadena Farmers’ Market, and the director of the Institute of Domestic Technology, invites Slow Food Los Angeles members and friends to an event marking the publication of Pure Vegan: 70 Recipes for Beautiful Meals and Clean Living:

When: Sunday, August 19, 2012 from 6:00-8:00pmWhere:Lindy and Grundy, 801 North Fairfax, Los AngelesCost: The event is free: Cookbooks will be available for purchase and the author will sign copies.

Reservations are required: Please contact rsvp@purevegancookbook.com with your name and the number in your party.

It may seem odd that a vegan cookbook is being celebrated at a sustainable butcher shop, but that’s in keeping with Shuldiner’s philosophy, which is summed up in his statement, “The title of the book is ‘Pure Vegan,” not ‘Puritanical Vegan.'” This is a book that celebrates eating rather than emphasizing the politics of a vegan lifestyle, and the recipes are both plant-based and indulgent. While all the recipes are non-meat/egg/dairy, Shuldiner’s combinations will appeal to meat-lovers and committed vegans alike.

]]>http://slowfoodla.com/2012/08/author-event-joseph-shuldiner-and-pure-vegan-at-lindy-grundys/feed/0John Muir High School’s CSA: Muir Ranchhttp://slowfoodla.com/2012/08/john-muir-high-schools-csa-muir-ranch/
http://slowfoodla.com/2012/08/john-muir-high-schools-csa-muir-ranch/#commentsSat, 04 Aug 2012 23:20:46 +0000http://slowfoodla.com/?p=2639John Muir High School’s CSA program–developed with the assistance of Doss Jones and Mud Baron–received some positive media coverage on our local CBS affiliate recently. Check out the students’ productive season: One we hope is the first of many to come.

Half-, full-, and flower-shares in the CSA are available by contacting Muir Ranch for a membership agreement form at johnmuircsa@gmail.com. More information is available in their online brochure.